To many Americans, the state’s noblest function is the education of our nation’s youth. We entrust this responsibility largely to the public schools, and hope our children grow into responsible citizens by learning the enduring values of Western Civilization we all share-an appreciation of critical reasoning, a commitment to democratic institutions, and a dedication to principles of fairness. In this immigrant nation of dreamers and dissidents, however, no broad consensus regarding the spiritual side of the human condition exists. Our Founding Fathers recognized the disharmony and drafted the Bill of Rights to requirе the separation of church and state. Accordingly, religious activity under the aegis of the government is strongly discouraged, and in some circumstances-for example, the classroom-is barred. The sacred practices of religious instruction and prayer, the Framers foresaw, are best left to private institutions-the family and houses of worship. In short, logic, tradition, and law create in our nation a “wall between church and state,”
Everson v. Board of Education,
I.
Questions of religious freedom can depend on sensitive issues of fact, and we turn first to the particular circumstances in which this case arose. In 1978, several students at Guilderland High School organized a group called “Students for Voluntary Prayer.” They sought permission in September 1978 from the school’s principal, Charles Ciaccio, to conduct communal prayer meetings in a classroom immediatеly before the school day commenced. The group noted that it was not seeking supervision or faculty involvement, and stated that its activities were voluntary and would not conflict with other school functions.
The principal denied the request by letter dated September 23, 1978. Shortly thereafter, the Superintendent of the Guilder-land School District refused permission. The Guilderland Board of Education voted on December 19, 1978, and again on March 6, 1979, to deny the group’s request. Six students 1 filed suit in June 1979 individually and on behalf of those students similarly situated. They stated in the complaint that the defendаnts-the'Board of Education and its individual members, the Superintendent of the school district, and Ciaccio, the principal-violated their First and Fourteenth Amendment rights to the free exercise of religion, freedom of speech, freedom of association, and equal protection. The students sought declaratory relief and requested the court to enjoin the defendants from denying them a classroom for their prayer meetings. The complaint prayed for monetary damages as well.
On April 16,1980, Judge McCurn granted summary judgment for the defendants, holding that the students were not entitled to relief as a matter of law and dismissing the complaint. After addressing several procedural points,
2
the court found that the
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Establishment Clause of the First Amendment barred the school from permitting the students to conduct prayer meetings in a classroom. Applying the tripartite test for Establishment Clause analysis formulated by the Supreme Court,
Committee for Public Education & Religious Liberty v. Regan,
Further Judge McCurn found the school’s refusal did not violate the students’ rights freely to exercise their religious beliefs. Moreover, even if some infringement occurred, the compelling state interest in maintaining the separation between church and state justified that restriction. Judge McCurn also rejected the students’ freedom of speech and assоciation arguments. Finally, the court found that the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment did not require a religious organization to be treated in a manner similar to the secular student groups permitted to use the school’s facilities. The students appeal the dismissal of their complaint.
II.
The First Amendment’s language protecting religious freedom is both crisp and elegant: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof. .. . ” While the ambiguities of history prevent us from determining exactly how the Founding Fathers intended the Establishment and Free Exercise Clauses to interact, coherent themes exist. The Supreme Court’s identification and elaboration of doctrine provides guidance to legislators, courts, and even school boards, in an era when the government’s regulation of daily life is pervasive and when our nation’s religious composition is far more diverse than that of post-Revolutionary America.
First Amendment jurisprudence emerges from a colonial background that reflected varying justifications for the separation of church and state. 3 An evangelical view, associated with Roger Williams, feared the corruptive influence of secular statism on religious purity. Religious freedom and separatism, therefore, were necessary for the protection of the spiritual life. A more worldly school of thought, associated with Jefferson, sought to protect the state from the church, and found that the erection of a “wall of separation,” Everson, supra, was necessary. The third view, that of James Madison, was that both religion and the state would prosper if freed from the undesirable effects each presented to the other.
The Supreme Court has consolidated these historical antecedents
4
to articulate three major policies underlying religious freedom; voluntarism of religious thought and conduct, government neutrality towards religion, and the separation of church and state.
5
Voluntarism recognizes that
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private choice, not official coercion, should form the basis for religious conduct and belief.
Walz v. Tax Commission,
As the role of government became more pervasive, a tension between principles of voluntarism and separation inevitably emerged. A strict reading of the Establishment Clause’s erection of the wall between church and state would require government to refrain from providing even the most essential public services to religious organizations. Such inflexible separatiоn, however, threatens free exercise, and therefore the principle of neutrality requires the state to provide fire and police services — and even some forms of financial assistance- — to religious schools and organizations.
Roemer v. Board of Public Works,
III.
When we apply these doctrines-voluntarism, neutrality, and separation-to the facts of this case, we discover that many of the Supreme Court’s religion decisions arose in a somewhat different context. Most controversies involving prayer in the schools or the granting of financial assistance to religious schools involved an Establishment Clause challenge to state statutes or regulations
7
supporting
religious activity-the recitation of classroom prayers,
School District of Abington Township v. Schempp, supra,
the use of school facilities for religious instruction,
McCollum v. Board of Education,
This case rаises a different problem. The local school board, acting as a duly authorized agent of New York state, New York Educ. Law § 414 (McKinney);
Trietley v. Board of Education,
A.
To demonstrate an infringement of his free exercise rights, an individual must show “the coercive effect of the [state] enactment as it operates against him in the practice of his religion.”
School District of Abington Township v. Schempp, supra,
In
Wisconsin v. Yoder, supra,
the Supreme Court found the criminal sanctions contained in a state compulsory education statute requiring attendance through age sixteen to violate the free exercise rights of Amish parents and their children. The Amish faith, the Court found, requires its members to lead a simple life, and to minimize contact with world influences by discontinuing formal schooling after the eighth grade. Chief Justice Burger, writing for the Court, fоund the practice “fundamental” and “mandated by the Amish religion.”
Similarly, in
Sherbert v. Verner, supra,
the Court found the observance of the Sabbath to be a “cardinal principle” for Seventh Day Adventists,
*977 B.
We find that the free exercise rights of the “Students for Voluntary Prayer” were not limited by the Guilderland School District’s refusal to permit communal prayer meetings to occur on school premises. The students assert in their complaint that “God has directed them to join together with one another and pray to him as a group whenever рossible and that such communal prayer is particularly rewarding and effective....” We do not challenge the students’ claim that group prayer is essential to their religious beliefs. The effect of the school’s actions, however-denying the students the opportunity to pray together in a classroom at the commencement of a school day-is hardly analogous to the coercive restraints on religious observation imposed by state action in Sherbert or Yoder.
The dilemma presented to individuals in
Sherbert
and
Yoder
was absolute. Individuals were forced to choose between neglecting their religious obligations and rendering themselves liable for criminal sanctions or ineligible for state benefits. The choice for the students in this case is much less difficult because the school’s rule does not place an absolute ban on communal prayer, nor are sanctions faced or benefits forfeited. While school attendance is compelled for several hours per day, five days per week, the students, presumably living at home, are free to worship together as they please before and after the school day and on weekends in a church or any other suitable place.
Stein v. Oshinksy,
Several cases have noted that the free exercise rationale set forth above does require the state to permit prayer in certain special circumstances. But, none of them is applicable here. Authorization for prayer at public universities, for example, has been required because students both study and reside there. Frequently they are unable to hold prayer meetings off campus.
Chess v. Widmar,
C.
Even if we were to accept the students’ contention that the School Board’s refusal to allow school prayer significantly encumbered their free exercise rights, a “compelling state interest” against the prayer meetings was present. Sherbert v. Verner, supra. The School board asserted as an affirmative defense below, and argues as a compelling state interest here, that an authorization of student-initiated voluntary prayer would have violated the Establishment Clause by creating an unconstitutional link between church аnd state. We agree.
A state statute or regulation does not contravene the Establishment Clause if (1) the enactment has a secular purpose, (2) its principal or primary effect neither advances nor inhibits religion, and (3) it does not foster an excessive entanglement with religion.
Regan, supra,
A neutral policy granting all student groups, including religious organizations, access to school facilities reflects a secular, and clearly permissible purpose-the encouragement of extracurricular activities.
Chess v. Widmar, supra,
Our nation’s elementary and secondary schools play a unique role in transmitting basic and fundamental values to our youth. To an impressionable student, even the mere appearance of secular involvement in religious activities might indicate that the state has placed its imprimátur on a particular religious creed. This symbolic inference is too dangerous to permit.
See Roemer v. Board of Public Works, supra,
Abington
and
Engel,
for example, involved teacher supervision of the reading of verses from the Bible land the recital of a prayer composed by the State Board of Regents. Although students were permitted to be excused from the classroom during the prayer, the Supreme Court found that a particular form of Western theistic religion was improperly advanced by it. Similarly, when teachers from religious organizations are permitted to enter a public school for the purpose of religious instruction, the symbolism is apparent.
McCollum, supra.
Religious interests are permissibly accommodated, and not advanced, however, where a public school allows its students to leave the premises for religious instruсtion under a “released time” program.
Zorach, supra.
Further, the semblance of official
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support is less evident where a school building is used at night as a temporary facility by religious organizations, under a program that grants access to all charitable groups.
Resnick v. East Brunswick Township Board of Education,
. The degree of official support of religious activities is greater, of course, in the school prayer or religious instruction cases than in the instant case. The record indicаtes that school buses discharge students at the Guilderland High School between 7:20 a. m. and 7:40 a. m., and that the official school day “begins” at this point. Any voluntary student prayer meetings conducted after the arrival of the school buses and before the formal “homeroom” period at 7:50 a.m., therefore, would occur during school hours. The prayer meetings would create an improper appearance of official support, and the prohibition against impermissibly advancing religion would be violated.
The final element of the test is the prohibition of “entanglеment,” and the School Board has demonstrated that an excessive involvement of the state in religious matters would have resulted if the students’ requests were granted. Entanglement analysis focuses on procedural questions.
Roemer v. Board of Public Works, supra,
School officials in this case would be forced to monitor the activities of the “Students for Voluntary Prayer.” The School Board has a duty under New York law to provide adequate supervision of all students in its “care and charge” during school hours.
Lauricella v. Board of Education,
Finally, we note that the state’s compelling Establishment Clause interest in removing from the school any indication of sponsoring religious activity leads to the inescapable conclusion that no alternative accommodations were possible. See, e. g., Engel v. Vitale, supra.
IV.
This leaves for our disposition the students’ claim that the School Board’s refusal violates their rights to free speech,
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freedom of association, and equal protection. The students’ argument, in short, is that they merely seek to exercise their rights to free speech in a public forum, unencumbered by governmental regulation of the context of their “speech.” They state that, in general students retain their fundamental constitutional right to free speech while attending school,
Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District,
Two significant factors, however, defeat the claims. First, a high school is not a “public forum” where religious views can be freely aired. The expression of religious points of view, and even the performance of religious rituals, is permissible in parks and streets when subject to reasonable time, place, and manner regulations.
Niemotko v. Maryland,
Also, the students’ equal protection argument is not persuasive. Other organizations are permitted to utilize school facilities, but their use does not raise serious problems of the establishment of religion. Moreover, since all religious groups are equally denied access to school facilities, any equal protection argument lacks merit.
See Trietley, supra,
V.
Although we affirm the dismissal of the students’ complaint, we cannot be critical of their objectives. Introspective activity that seeks to strengthen the moral fibre of our nation’s young adults deserves our support, but only in our role as private citizens. We hope that the “Students for Voluntary Prayer” can conduct their prayer meetings and religious discussions at another place and at different times. To permit these activities to occur in the classrooms of a public high school immediately prior to the commencement of the school day, however, would contribute to the erosion of principles articulated by our colonial fathers and embraced by religious dissenters for several hundred years. To paraphrase Lord Melbourne, while the state cannot be regarded as a pillar of the edifice of religion, it may be considered a buttress, supporting free exercise from the outside. We must be careful that our public schools, where fundamental values are imparted to our chil *981 dren, are not perceived as institutions that encourage the adoption of any sect or religious ideology.
Notes
. Three of the six plaintiffs-Jeanne Brandon, Jill George, and William Smith-were minors when the action was commenced and were represented by their parents or legal guardians. All of the plaintiffs have since graduated from Guilderland High School. No mootness problem exists, however,
DeFunis v. Odegaard,
. Judge McCurn correctly held that the plaintiffs’ failure to present a written verified complaint to the school officials within three months after the accrual of their claim, required by New York Educ. Law § 3813(1) (McKinney) as a condition precedent to the commencement of non-tort suits against a school district, did not necessitate dismissal of the complaint. He found that compliancе with
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the notice requirement is not mandatory in civil rights actions brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
See Paschall v. Mayone,
. See L. Tribe, American Constitutional Law § 14-3 at 816-17 (1978).
.
See, e. g., Walz v. Tax Commission,
. Tribe, supra, § 14-4 at 818-19; Note, Government Neutrality and Separation of Church and State: Tuition Tax Credits, 92 Harv.L.Rev. 696, 697-700 (1979).
.
See, e. g., Committee for Public Education & Religious Liberty v. Regan,
. The religious freedoms protected by the First Amendment are incorporated in the Fourteenth Amendment, and therefore limit the conduct of state governments as well as the federal gоvernment.
Regan, supra,
. In several additional landmark free exercise cases the individual religious interests of Jehovah’s Witnesses in peddling their religious literature, e.
g., Murdock v. Pennsylvania,
. In
Reed v. Van Hoven,
